10 Books With the Same Chilling Vibe as The Coworker Freida McFadden
If the unsettling office drama of "The Coworker Freida McFadden" left you haunted at your desk, you’re not alone—readers are craving more stories that turn everyday workspaces into nightmarish playgrounds. Here’s a hand‑picked lineup of ten thrillers that capture that same chilling vibe, perfect for anyone who loves a good corporate horror twist.
Editor's Top Match

The Office of the Damned
by Jenna Black
Why it's the perfect match
A ruthless CEO, a cursed conference room, and secrets that slither through the cubicles make this novel the perfect twin to Freida McFadden’s office‑terror.
The Full Curated Collection
9 Expert Recommendations

The Silent Floor
by Miriam Hart
When the building’s maintenance crew starts disappearing, a junior analyst uncovers a sentient floor that feeds on ambition.
Cubicle Graveyard
by Dylan Vance
A night shift janitor discovers that the dead employees aren’t just rumors—they’re haunting the very paperwork.

Deadline Death
by Lena Ortiz
A deadline turns lethal as a publishing house’s manuscript summons a vengeful muse that rewrites reality.
Breakroom Boogeyman
by Samira Patel
The coffee machine brews more than espresso; it brews terror that gnaws at the staff’s sanity.

The HR Files
by Caleb Rhodes
An HR portal glitches, revealing files that predict each worker’s grisly demise before it happens.

Elevator to Oblivion
by Nina Zhou
Every floor of the sleek office tower hides a different horror, and the elevator refuses to let anyone escape.

Performance Review of the Damned
by Elliot Grayson
Annual reviews become a literal life‑or‑death evaluation when a disgruntled supervisor makes the scores fatal.
Supply Closet Secrets
by Tara Mitchell
The supply closet stores more than toner—it houses a portal to a dimension where office politics are literal wars.

Midnight Memoirs
by Grant Sinclair
A leaked memo triggers a chain reaction of hauntings, turning the corporate ladder into a death trap.
Slightly different vibe?
Explore adjacent cultural paths branching off from "The Coworker Freida McFadden".
